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Automate Signal Labeling with Custom Functions

This example shows how to use custom autolabeling functions in Signal Labeler to label QRS complexes and R peaks of electrocardiogram (ECG) signals. One custom function uses a previously trained recurrent deep learning network to identify and locate the QRS complexes. Another custom function uses a simple peak finder to locate the R peaks. In this example, the network labels the QRS complexes of two signals that are completely independent of the network training and testing process.

The QRS complex, which consists of three deflections in the ECG waveform, reflects the depolarization of the right and left ventricles of the heart. The QRS is also the highest-amplitude segment of the human heartbeat. Study of the QRS complex can help assess the overall health of a person's heart and the presence of abnormalities [1]. In particular, by locating R peaks within the QRS complexes and looking at the time intervals between consecutive peaks, a diagnostician can compute the heart-rate variability of a patient and detect cardiac arrhythmia.

The deep learning network in this example was introduced in Waveform Segmentation Using Deep Learning, where it was trained using ECG signals from the publicly available QT Database [2] [3]. The data consists of roughly 15 minutes of ECG recordings from a total of 105 patients, sampled at 250 Hz. To obtain each recording, the examiners placed two electrodes on different locations on a patient's chest, which resulted in a two-channel signal. The database provides signal region labels generated by an automated expert system [1]. The added labels make it possible to use the data to train a deep learning network.

Load, Resample, and Import Data into Signal Labeler

The signals labeled in this example are from the MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database [4]. Each signal in the database was irregularly sampled at a mean rate of 360 Hz and was annotated by two cardiologists, allowing for verification of the results.

Load two MIT database signals, corresponding to records 200 and 203. Resample the signals to a uniform grid with a sample time of 1/250 second, which corresponds to the nominal sample rate of the QT Database data.

load mit200
y200 = resample(ecgsig,tm,250);

load mit203
y203 = resample(ecgsig,tm,250);

Open Signal Labeler. On the Labeler tab, click Import and select From Workspace in the Members list. In the dialog box, select the signals y200 and y203. Add time information: Select Time from the drop-down list and specify a sample rate of 250 Hz. Click Import and Close. The signals appear in the Labeled Signal Set Members browser. Plot the signals by selecting the check boxes next to their names.

Define Labels

Define labels to attach to the signals.

  1. Define a categorical region-of-interest (ROI) label for the QRS complexes. Click Add Definition on the Labeler tab. Specify the Label Name as QRSregions, select a Label Type of ROI, enter the Data Type as categorical, and add two Categories, QRS and n/a, each on its own line.

  2. Define a sublabel of QRSregions as a numerical point label for the R peaks. Click QRSregions in the Label Definitions browser to select it. Click Add Definition and select Add sublabel definition. Specify the Label Name as Rpeaks, select a LabelType of Point, and enter the Data Type as numeric.

Create Custom Autolabeling Functions

Create two Custom Labeling Functions, one to locate and label the QRS complexes and another to locate and label the R peak within each QRS complex. (Code for the findQRS and findRpeaks functions appears later in the example.) To create each function, in the Labeler tab, expand the Automate Value gallery and select Add Custom Function. Signal Labeler shows a dialog box asking for the name, description, and label type of the function.

  1. For the function that locates the QRS complexes, enter findQRS in the Name field and select ROI as the Label Type. You can leave the Description field empty or you can enter your own description.

  2. For the function that locates the R peaks, enter findRpeaks in the Name field and select Point as the Label Type. You can leave the Description field empty or you can enter your own description.

If you already have written the functions, and the functions are in the current folder or in the MATLAB® path, Signal Labeler adds the functions to the gallery. If you have not written the functions, Signal Labeler opens blank templates in the Editor for you to type or paste the code. Save the files. Once you save the files, the functions appear in the gallery.

Label QRS Complexes and R Peaks

Find and label the QRS complexes of the input signals.

  1. In the Labeled Signal Set Members browser, select the check box next to y200.

  2. Select QRSregions in the Label Definitions browser.

  3. In the Automate Value gallery, select findQRS.

  4. Click Auto-Label and select Auto-Label All Signals. In the dialog box that appears, enter the 250 Hz sample rate in the Arguments field and click OK.

Signal Labeler locates and labels the QRS complexes for all signals, but displays labels only for the signals whose check boxes are selected. The QRS complexes appear as shaded regions in the plot and in the label viewer axes. Activate the panner by clicking Panner on the Display tab and zoom in on a region of the labeled signal.

Find and label the R peaks corresponding to the QRS complexes.

  1. Select Rpeaks in the Label Definitions browser.

  2. Go back to the Labeler tab. In the Automate Value gallery, select findRpeaks.

  3. Click Auto-Label and select Auto-Label All Signals. Click OK in the dialog box that appears.

The labels and their numeric values appear in the plot and in the label viewer axes.

Export Labeled Signals and Compute Heart-Rate Variability

Export the labeled signals to compare the heart-rate variability for each patient. On the Labeler tab, click Export and select To File in the Labeled Signal Set list. In the dialog box that appears, give the name HeartRates.mat to the labeled signal set and add an optional short description. Click Export.

Go back to the MATLAB® Command Window. Load the labeled signal set. For each signal in the set, compute the heart-rate variability as the standard deviation of the time differences between consecutive heartbeats. Plot a histogram of the differences and display the heart-rate variability.

load HeartRates

nms = getMemberNames(heartrates);

for k = 1:heartrates.NumMembers
    
    v = getLabelValues(heartrates,k,["QRSregions" "Rpeaks"]);
    
    hr = diff(cellfun(@(x) x.Location,v));
    
    subplot(2,1,k)
    histogram(hr,0.5:0.025:1.5)
    legend("hrv = " + std(hr))
    ylabel(nms(k))
    ylim([0 6])

end

Figure contains 2 axes objects. Axes object 1 with ylabel y200 contains an object of type histogram. This object represents hrv = 0.18764. Axes object 2 with ylabel y203 contains an object of type histogram. This object represents hrv = 0.17064.

findQRS Function: Find QRS Complexes

The findQRS function finds and labels the QRS complexes of the input signals.

The function uses an auxiliary function, computeFSST, to reshape the input data and compute the Fourier synchrosqueezed transform (FSST). You can either store computeFSST in a separate file in the same directory or nest it inside findQRS by inserting it before the final end statement.

findQRS uses the classify (Deep Learning Toolbox) function and the trained deep learning network net to identify the QRS regions. The deep learning network outputs a categorical array that labels every point of the input signal as belonging to a P region, a QRS complex, a T region, or to none of these. This function converts the point labels corresponding to a QRS complex to QRS region-of-interest labels using signalMask and discards the rest. The df parameter selects as regions of interest only those QRS complexes whose duration is greater than 20 samples. If you do not specify a sample rate, the function uses a default value of 250 Hz.

function [labelVals,labelLocs] = findQRS(x,t,parentLabelVal,parentLabelLoc,varargin)
% This is a template for creating a custom function for automated labeling
%
%  x is a matrix where each column contains data corresponding to a
%  channel. If the channels have different lengths, then x is a cell array
%  of column vectors.
%
%  t is a matrix where each column contains time corresponding to a
%  channel. If the channels have different lengths, then t is a cell array
%  of column vectors.
%
%  parentLabelVal is the parent label value associated with the output
%  sublabel or empty when output is not a sublabel.
%  parentLabelLoc contains an empty vector when the parent label is an
%  attribute, a vector of ROI limits when parent label is an ROI or a point
%  location when parent label is a point.
%
%  labelVals must be a column vector with numeric, logical or string output
%  values.
%  labelLocs must be an empty vector when output labels are attributes, a
%  two column matrix of ROI limits when output labels are ROIs, or a column
%  vector of point locations when output labels are points.

labelVals = cell(2,1);
labelLocs = cell(2,1);

if nargin<5
    Fs = 250;
else
    Fs = varargin{1};
end

df = 20;

load("trainedQTSegmentationNetwork","net")

for kj = 1:size(x,2)

    sig = x(:,kj);
      
    % Reshape input and compute Fourier synchrosqueezed transforms

    mitFSST = computeFSST(sig,Fs);
    
    % Use trained network to predict which points belong to QRS regions
    
    netPreds = classify(net,mitFSST,MiniBatchSize=50);

    % Create a signal mask for QRS regions and specify minimum sequence length
    
    QRS = categorical([netPreds{1} netPreds{2}]',"QRS");
    msk = signalMask(QRS,MinLength=df,SampleRate=Fs);
    r = roimask(msk);
    
    % Label QRS complexes as regions of interest
    
    labelVals{kj} = r.Value;
    labelLocs{kj} = r.ROILimits;

end

labelVals = vertcat(labelVals{:});
labelLocs = cell2mat(labelLocs);

% Insert computeFSST here if you want to nest it inside findQRS.

end

computeFSST Function: Reshape Input and Compute Fourier Synchrosqueezed Transforms

This function uses the fsst function to compute the Fourier synchrosqueezed transform (FSST) of the input. As discussed in Waveform Segmentation Using Deep Learning, the network performs best when given as input a time-frequency map of each training or testing signal. The FSST results in a set of features particularly useful for recurrent networks because the transform has the same time resolution as the original input. The function:

  • Pads the input data with random numbers and reshapes it into the 2-by-5000 cell array stack expected by net.

  • Specifies a Kaiser window of length 128 and default shape factor β=0.5 to provide adequate frequency resolution.

  • Extracts data over the frequency range from 0.5 Hz to 40 Hz.

  • Treats the real and imaginary parts of the FSST as separate features.

  • Normalizes the data by subtracting the mean and dividing by the standard deviation.

function signalsFsst = computeFSST(xd,Fs)

xd = reshape([xd;randn(10000-length(xd),1)/100],5000,2);
signalsFsst = cell(1,2);    
    
for k = 1:2
    [ss,ff] = fsst(xd(:,k),Fs,kaiser(128));
    sp = ss(ff>0.5 & ff<40,:);
    signalsFsst{k} = normalize([real(sp);imag(sp)],2);
end

end

findRpeaks Function: Find R Peaks

This function locates the most prominent peak of the QRS regions of interest found by findQRS. The function applies the MATLAB® islocalmax function to the absolute value of the signal in the intervals located by findQRS.

function [labelVals,labelLocs] = findRpeaks(x,t,parentLabelVal,parentLabelLoc,varargin)

labelVals = zeros(size(parentLabelLoc,1),1);
labelLocs = zeros(size(parentLabelLoc,1),1);

for kj = 1:size(parentLabelLoc,1)
    tvals = t>=parentLabelLoc(kj,1) & t<=parentLabelLoc(kj,2);
    ti = t(tvals);
    xi = x(tvals);
    lc = islocalmax(abs(xi),MaxNumExtrema=1);
    labelVals(kj) = xi(lc);
    labelLocs(kj) = ti(lc);
end

end

References

[1] Laguna, Pablo, Raimon Jané, and Pere Caminal. "Automatic Detection of Wave Boundaries in Multilead ECG Signals: Validation with the CSE Database." Computers and Biomedical Research. Vol. 27, No. 1, 1994, pp. 45–60.

[2] Goldberger, Ary L., Luis A. N. Amaral, Leon Glass, Jeffery M. Hausdorff, Plamen Ch. Ivanov, Roger G. Mark, Joseph E. Mietus, George B. Moody, Chung-Kang Peng, and H. Eugene Stanley. "PhysioBank, PhysioToolkit, and PhysioNet: Components of a New Research Resource for Complex Physiologic Signals." Circulation. Vol. 101, No. 23, 2000, pp. e215–e220. [Circulation Electronic Pages: http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/101/23/e215.full].

[3] Laguna, Pablo, Roger G. Mark, Ary L. Goldberger, and George B. Moody. "A Database for Evaluation of Algorithms for Measurement of QT and Other Waveform Intervals in the ECG." Computers in Cardiology. Vol. 24, 1997, pp. 673–676.

[4] Moody, George B., and Roger G. Mark. "The impact of the MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database." IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine. Vol. 20, No. 3, May–June 2001, pp. 45–50.

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